The Ring of Winter (32 page)

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Authors: James Lowder

BOOK: The Ring of Winter
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Nodding absently, Artus murmured, “T’fima isn’t a bara? He doesn’t have the power to control the weather?”

“Osaw and the others have not held the ceremony to replace him because they do not know he lost his power,” Ras Nsi said. “As one of the original seven, my link to the city is far more vital than theirs. I could sense it when T’fima fell away from his duty. It was like he died.”

In the empty hearth, Lugg stirred and snorted awake. “Oi. What’s all the shouting about?”

“Time for us to go,” Artus told the wombat.

Ras Nsi nibbed his chin with one thumb. “Not just yet, Artus Cimber.” He narrowed his eyes until they were mere slits of light. “I know a great deal about you and this Kaverin Ebonhand who has taken up with the Batiri, but there is one thing I have not been able to discover. Tell me that, and I will transport you back to Mezro.”

“Perhaps,” Artus replied impatiently.

“Why did you come to Chult? What are you after?” He dropped the spear to the floor. With a thud, it stuck there.

Artus turned toward the door. “That’s a private matter, Your Excellency. Something that does not concern Mezro or Ubtao,” he said. “Thank you for your hospitality, but we really should be going.”

“Are we going to ‘ave to walk back to the city?” the wombat asked as he got stiffly to his feet. “We don’t even know where we are!”

“Lugg is quite correct,” Ras Nsi said, slouching back into his throne. “You will be days getting back to Mezro on your own. The battle will be quite over by then.”

“Then I won’t be able to help them fight the Batiri,” Artus said coldly. “Will you stand in the way of that just because I won’t answer your question?”

Outside, the sounds of toppling trees had resumed, and the string quartet had taken up their instruments again on the upper floor. Ras Nsi stood. “Of course you are correct,” he said. “You are fighting for Mezro, and I would be a fool to miss this opportunity to aid the city—even indirectly.” With a grand gesture, he swirled his sky-blue cloak.

Artus and Lugg began to fade, like the ghostly Pontifax that had haunted the explorer’s mind from time to time in the jungle. Before Artus disappeared, though, Ras Nsi said, “It’s the ring, isn’t it? The one Rayburton brought to Chult from the North? He always was afraid of people like you coming here to hunt for it.”

The bara didn’t need to hear Artus’s reply. The shock on the explorer’s face told him everything he wanted to know.

 

 

Artus and Lugg found themselves in the Hall of Champions, standing before the empty pedestal that might one day hold a statue of Ras Nsi. The place was deserted, save for the mute stone heroes, but far from silent. Sounds of a fierce battle came from the plaza. Shouted orders entwined with the screams of the wounded. The sharp clatter of steel against steel rose above the rumble of magical thunder. The fight for Mezro bad begun.

“By Tempus’s spiked glove,” Artus cursed and started toward the door, Lugg at his heels.

In the plaza and throughout the ancient city of Mezro, the scene was chaos, the noise almost deafening. Dozens of pteradons filled the sky, silver orbs clutched in their talons. The flying reptiles soared over the heart of the city on broad leathery wings. When they passed over a group of Mezroan warriors or an important building, they dropped the magical bombs Skuld had given them. The explosions that followed lit the twilight sky and momentarily drowned out the cries of the warriors injured by the blasts. Shards of the shattered buildings and cobblestone from the broken streets ripped through the air, adding to the growing league of the Tabaxi dead.

The city’s defenders met the airborne assault with balls of fire and sheets of arrows. In places, magical shields spread like umbrellas over the troops. The bombs exploded against the glowing barriers, filling the sky with fire. Mezroan warriors mounted upon huge butterflies sailed after the pteradons, spearing them with lances or tangling nets around their heads and wings. From time to time one of the reptiles dropped from the air. The creature always changed as it fell, reverting to a form roughly human, though brutish and armored with scales.

From the temple’s doorway, Artus could see little of the battle on the ground. Many of the Mezroan sorcerers had taken up positions around the sacred building’s single side. They wore the traditional tobe, but also half-cloaks colored in rainbow hues that continually changed. Some of the men and women huddled in tight groups, while others dealt with attacks from the air. A young woman with a mesmerizing pattern of blood-red lines drawn upon her face and arms wielded a long whip of sunlight. With it she battled a pteradon that was trying to fly close to the front ranks. Wherever the brilliant lash struck, it seared the lizard’s flesh, leaving its chest scarred and its wings ragged.

Beyond the circle of mages, a line of Tabaxi warriors stood against the goblin horde. They wore wild crowns of feathers and bands of silver and gold on their arms and legs. Dinosaur hide covered their chests. No armor protected their backs, only the tails of exotic jungle cats. There was no need for more than that; Tabaxi warriors never turned away from a foe.

The spearhead of the Batiri attack seemed to come from the northeast, the Scholars’ Quarter, well away from the river and any help Mainu could provide. For now, the Tabaxi seemed content to hold a front against the goblins, to keep them away from the temple and the Residential Quarter. Men and women fought side by side. They carried steel-tipped spears, war clubs ridged with sharp studs, and large, diamond-shaped shields. Tiny Batiri arrows stack out from those shields as thickly as trees stood in the jungle, but only a few shafts got past the wall of tanned hide. The warriors took their wounds stoically, but they fought with fury—as the hundreds of goblin corpses littering the plaza before them proved.

“That ghoulish bloke would ‘ave a lovely time ‘round ‘ere,” Lugg said breathlessly. “Good thing no one invited ‘im along.” He looked up at the explorer. “How are we going to find Byrt in all this?”

The question went unheard. “Look, Lugg, you might want to stay inside the temple. You’ll be safe there.” Artus scanned the assembled mages and warriors for some sign of Negus Kwalu or King Osaw.

The brown wombat stood a moment on the temple’s doorstep. The crash and clatter of the battle frightened him, but not enough to paralyze him into inaction. “Awright, Byrt,” he murmured, his beady eyes solemn. “If Artus plans to forget his promise, I’ll come to find you on my own.”

“Did you say something?” Artus asked. When he looked down, Lugg was gone. “Must have followed my word … for once,” the explorer noted with surprise, turning his gaze back to the ranks of sorcerers and warriors.

Finally Artus spotted a triangular platinum banner rising above the throng. He looked closer and saw a faint shield of light glittering in the gloaming, arched over the banner and the men gathered around it.

Artus pushed his way through the crowd, coming at last to a tight knot of warriors. “I’ve important news for the king,” Artus shouted, hoping to be heard over the din of lightning bolts and magical explosions.

A calloused hand reached through the throng and guided the explorer through the guards. “We thought we would never see you again,” Kwalu said. The negus wore his battle regalia, and had a wild look in his eyes.

“His Excellency was quite hospitable,” Artus replied, carefully avoiding Ras Nsi’s name. “You’re right about him being a madman, though. Where’s Sanda?”

“Alisanda has yet to return from her hunting expedition,” King Osaw said sadly. “We fear her captured.”

Kwalu frowned. “Never. She is too crafty to be caught by goblins; she knew they were preparing for war.”

A shiver of dread ran up Artus’s spine, but he reminded himself that worrying about Sanda would do her no good. If she were a prisoner of the Batiri, the only way he could help her, and the rest of the city, was to fight.

Briefly the king explained how the goblins had begun their assault a few hours ago, while the sun was still bright in the sky. Such tactics were unheard of, and while the Mezroans were not caught completely off-guard, they were surprised enough for the Batiri to push their way into the Scholars’ Quarter. The goblins must have used scouts or spied upon the bara magically, for they were staying far away from the river, out of reach of Mainu’s aquatic minions.

It was also clear the Batiri objective was the Temple of Ubtao, for they never launched any attack that might seriously damage the building. Even the pteradons directed their bombs away from the temple. “We have used that against them,” Osaw concluded. “If we know they will not harm the temple, we can make it the locus for our army. They dare not direct killing magic against us here, and our warriors are capable of striking ten times for each goblin arrow loosed.”

“What about Kaverin?” Artus asked. “And Skuld? I’m surprised that silver monstrosity hasn’t shown himself yet.”

Kwalu jerked a thumb toward a circle of ten mages. They stood arm in arm, heads bowed in fierce concentration. “We have not seen Kaverin Ebonhand, but our best mages have the silver one trapped,” he noted proudly.

“Skuld is a being of such immense magical strength that the sorcerers could sense him coming toward Mezro,” the king added. “The moment he entered the city, they conjured a powerful cage of energy and sent it after him. He got no more than a dozen steps into the Scholars’ Quarter before they captured him.” Osaw bowed his head. “We have not had need of the spell in hundreds and hundreds of years, not since the Eshowe led a thing of darkness out of the jungle to strike us down… .”

The king’s words trailed off, and Artus turned to the circle of mages. Capturing Skuld may have been easy for them. Holding him prisoner was obviously a different matter. Sweat beaded upon their brows, and many of them gritted their teeth in concentration. One man, his short beard white with age, swayed where he stood. A boy helped to steady him, whispering encouragements to the exhausted mage.

Suddenly, shrieks of pain and horror went up from the sorcerers, underscored by a peal of triumphant laughter that rang out over the din of battle. At the far edge of the Scholars’ Quarter, a silver-skinned figure grew larger and larger, until at last it towered over the libraries and schools. Skuld looked down at the chaotic streets and laughed again, his filed teeth glinting in the twilight.

The ten bars of energy around the giant had expanded to contain him. Each of Skuld’s four hands grasped a snaking bar, wrenching it first this way, then that. He tried to twist them apart, smash them, even bite them to pieces, but nothing seemed to work. His laughter turned to shouts of rage. Cursing, he grabbed one bar with all four hands and shook it violently.

This time only one member of the sorcerous circle cried out—the white-bearded old man. As Skuld battered the band of energy, the mage quivered and quaked. A thin line of blood snaked down his arm, a line that matched the fracture in the hissing band of light in Skuld’s grip. When the bar broke, the mage’s arm snapped. The bone jutted out like a spear tip, but still he kept his place, held up by the shoulders of those to either side him.

“I can help against Skuld,” Artus said, “maybe even stop the goblin attack, but I need to get to Ras T’fima. Can the army spare a flying mount to take me to his camp?”

“There’s no need for that,” Kwalu said. “Hard to believe, but T’fima came to help us.”

“He’s here?” Artus shouted. “Where?”

“Near the Residential Quarter,” the king said. “He’s guarding the old people and children until they can—”

The explorer bowed perfunctorily and raced away. King Osaw and Negus Kwalu watched Artus until the crowd of warriors swallowed him. “Perhaps he will be able to convince T’fima to do more than shepherd children tonight,” Kwalu said bitterly. “We need his power over the weather if we are to drive the Batiri out of Mezro. I don’t know why he came back if he did not plan to use the powers Ubtao granted him.”

The king shrugged. “Mezro inspires odd loyalties, and not all of them are grounded upon worship of Ubtao.” He looked back to where Artus had disappeared into the throng. “Have faith in that, if Artus cannot sway T’fima, he may be able to discover some other way to aid the city.” Osaw nodded. “Yes, I think that very likely indeed.”

 

 

Arrows rained down around Artus as he charged behind the Mezroan lines, toward the Residential Quarter. The warriors’ shields protected the army from the shafts fired low to the ground, but the mages could keep their magical barriers over only the most important people in the rear ranks. This left the land in between the sorcerous protection a prime target for the Batiri archers, who fired blindly over the front ranks in hopes of hitting someone.

The growing darkness compounded the danger. If you lit a torch, an archer could aim for the light. If you tried to move about in the dark, you were likely to shatter an ankle in one of the holes opened by the pteradons’ bombing raids or slice apart an arm or leg on a weapon dropped by a wounded warrior. Still, the darkness wouldn’t be a problem for long; from the red glow to the east, Artus guessed that the goblins had set fire to the crops farthest from the river. The blaze would spread quickly, lighting the night with its hellish radiance.

“Hey! Look out there!”

A pteradon swooped low over the front rank of warriors, too fast for anyone to land a solid blow with spear or club. The birdlike reptile opened its beak in an angry squawk—just enough for Artus to get a hold on its lower jaw.

The fin radiating back from a pteradon’s skull was very much like a ship’s rudder, so when Artus yanked the raider’s head down, it lost control of its flight. That, coupled with the explorer’s weight, made the flying lizard spin out of the air. Together Artus and the pteradon rolled across the cobblestones. Talons scraped at the explorer’s legs and stomach, while the creature’s wings buffeted his face and arms. Before the pteradon could think to bite his fingers off, Artus wisely let go of its beak. By that time, the two were so tangled together that they continued to tumble across the plaza as one.

That, was a fortunate thing, since the pteradon finally lost its grip on the bomb it had been clutching in one taloned foot. The silver egg bounced once, twice, then exploded. Artus didn’t see the burst of flame, but he heard the roar and felt the wave of fire and barrage of cobbles that struck the pteradon. He understood in that instant why the Mezroan warriors favored dinosaur-hide armor; the flying lizard wrapped angrily around him shielded him from the blast.

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